Photos for March 19, 2012

Delaware standout Elena Delle Donne listens to a reporter's question during a news conference Monday, March 19, 2012, in Little Rock Ark., previewing the Kansas-Delaware meeting in the second round of the NCAA Tournament.

Allen Chen separates a mold for an installation Monday at the Lawrence Arts Center. Chen is a ceramics artist and a Lawrence Arts Center artist in residence. The year-long residency program chooses artists who can create a new body of work as well as contribute to the community during their time in Lawrence.

Eudora resident Jim Harris, who lives about a mile south of Eudora, walks around his property, which features a collection of antique gasoline pumps and a sign marking it Keystone Corner, last Monday. The land and the area around it once held homes William Quantrill visited on his ride to Lawrence. The property’s deep history means it will likely be surveyed, among 300 other sites, as part of a project that aims to create an inventory of naturally, culturally and historically significant sites in Douglas County.

KU Endowment officials are asking for pieces of an historic fence to be returned — no questions asked — so repairs can be made.

Contributed photo/KU Endowment

Officials with Kansas University Endowment Association are asking for the return of pieces of this historic fence — no questions asked. The fence, which runs along the south side of 14th Street, just off Jayhawk Boulevard, was damaged and parts of it were stolen Saturday night or Sunday morning.

The Kansas town of Muscotah, north of Valley Falls, has only one business and a population less than 180. Numerous signs around the town honor former resident Joe Tinker, a Hall of Fame baseball player who played for the Chicago Cubs between 1902 and 1916.

Numerous signs around the town of Muscotah, Kan. — population less than 180 — honor perhaps the town's most famous former resident, Baseball Hall of Fame inductee Joe Tinker. Tinker played for the Chicago Cubs between 1902 and 1916.

Muscotah, Kan., man Jeff Hanson is working to make the town's old water tower into a baseball museum honoring Baseball Hall of Famer Joe Tinker, who was born in the town in 1880. Hanson, 69, is also hoping a museum would bring much needed business to Muscotah.

Ed Masuch, left, and 12-year-old Dylan Shafer, both of Ottawa, browse through a table of various items while a chiseled wooden bear waits to be bought during a garage sale at 1643 Bullene Ave. on Saturday, March 10, 2012.